Use 5 questions to reflect on a unit
Reflection can help you target Biblical
perspective. After teaching a Biblical
perspective unit, use these 5 questions to reflect:
Question: What does using
these questions look like?
Answer: Here are Kim Essenburg’s responses. Kim teaches English 10 at Christian Academy in Japan.
(1) What student learning results are you excited about?
Kim: I’m excited that 1 of my English 10 students wrote, “I have no right to choose whether I should help or not; the day I chose to follow my consistent and loving God, I threw away the option of apathy.”
(2) What were your students studying?
Kim: Elie Wiesel’s Night, a Holocaust memoir. During their study, they focused on 2 essential questions: “What’s wrong with the world?” and “Who is my neighbor?”
At the end of the 3-week unit, my students wrote essays. I’m excited that their writing is improving, and I’m excited that they applied a Biblical perspective to a theme of Night, the mistreatment of others.
(3) What was the essay prompt?
Kim: My students wrote 750-word essays on the following: How significant a part of what’s wrong with the world is the tendency to disregard the human dignity of others, and how should a Christian respond? Illustrate your answer from literature, history, current events, and your own experience. Be sure to address the relevance of the Biblical concepts of the image of God and the second greatest commandment.
(4) How did you prepare your students for it?
Kim: Before they started reading Night, my students considered 2 essential questions (“What’s wrong with the world?” and “Who is my neighbor?”) and discussed “Justice in an Unjust World,” a 5-page article by Gary Haugen, president of International Justice Mission.
Then as they read Night, they discussed racism, discrimination, human dignity, and the basis of human dignity, being created in God’s image. They also increased their awareness of recent events by watching clips from Hotel Rwanda and jig-sawing 4 articles:
(5) What did you learn from teaching your Night unit?
Kim: Well, I have a deeper appreciation for the power of preparing students for an assessment before, during, and after the study of a piece of literature. And I realize that providing students with additional articles is helpful—last year they discussed 2 articles and this year they discussed 5. The additional articles helped my students get a better understanding of sin and its implications for how people treat each other.
Teaching can be discouraging at times, and reading essays in which students apply a Biblical perspective is encouraging! I was encouraged, for example, when I read, “Our voices can be heard. We just need to speak up loud enough for the world to hear; there are many ways to do this…[not] telling racist jokes is how I plan to do my part.”
Writing this essay helped my students more deeply connect what they study, their lives, and a Biblical perspective.
* Want to read additional reflections?
- What student learning results excited about?
- What were your students studying?
- What was the assessment prompt?
- How did you prepare your students for it?
- What did you learn from teaching your unit?
Answer: Here are Kim Essenburg’s responses. Kim teaches English 10 at Christian Academy in Japan.
(1) What student learning results are you excited about?
Kim: I’m excited that 1 of my English 10 students wrote, “I have no right to choose whether I should help or not; the day I chose to follow my consistent and loving God, I threw away the option of apathy.”
(2) What were your students studying?
Kim: Elie Wiesel’s Night, a Holocaust memoir. During their study, they focused on 2 essential questions: “What’s wrong with the world?” and “Who is my neighbor?”
At the end of the 3-week unit, my students wrote essays. I’m excited that their writing is improving, and I’m excited that they applied a Biblical perspective to a theme of Night, the mistreatment of others.
(3) What was the essay prompt?
Kim: My students wrote 750-word essays on the following: How significant a part of what’s wrong with the world is the tendency to disregard the human dignity of others, and how should a Christian respond? Illustrate your answer from literature, history, current events, and your own experience. Be sure to address the relevance of the Biblical concepts of the image of God and the second greatest commandment.
(4) How did you prepare your students for it?
Kim: Before they started reading Night, my students considered 2 essential questions (“What’s wrong with the world?” and “Who is my neighbor?”) and discussed “Justice in an Unjust World,” a 5-page article by Gary Haugen, president of International Justice Mission.
Then as they read Night, they discussed racism, discrimination, human dignity, and the basis of human dignity, being created in God’s image. They also increased their awareness of recent events by watching clips from Hotel Rwanda and jig-sawing 4 articles:
- “Being Muslim in a Mad, Sad, World”—an August
3, 2005, editorial in The Yomiuri Shimbun
(which was reposting the article from The
Washington Post).
- “Keep Crying Out”—a 1-page description of
Darfur from the December 9, 2006, edition of
The Economist.
- “A Responsibility to Protect”—a 2-page article
from the December 2006 edition of
Sojourners that considers the question,
“‘Is military intervention the only way?’”
- “Alien Nation”—an article by Isaac Canales from the fall 2007 edition of Leadership that discusses illegal aliens in California.
(5) What did you learn from teaching your Night unit?
Kim: Well, I have a deeper appreciation for the power of preparing students for an assessment before, during, and after the study of a piece of literature. And I realize that providing students with additional articles is helpful—last year they discussed 2 articles and this year they discussed 5. The additional articles helped my students get a better understanding of sin and its implications for how people treat each other.
Teaching can be discouraging at times, and reading essays in which students apply a Biblical perspective is encouraging! I was encouraged, for example, when I read, “Our voices can be heard. We just need to speak up loud enough for the world to hear; there are many ways to do this…[not] telling racist jokes is how I plan to do my part.”
Writing this essay helped my students more deeply connect what they study, their lives, and a Biblical perspective.
* Want to read additional reflections?